GovLoop

How GSA Stays Ahead of the IT Modernization Curve

The General Services Administration (GSA) is no stranger to streamlining IT processes. Prior to the passage of the Federal Information Technology Acquisition Reform Act (FITARA), GSA was already working towards the goal of mitigating IT inefficiencies in government by consolidating all IT functions into one organization, known now as GSA IT.

“We are seven standard deviations ahead of the federal average for use of cloud,” David Shive, GSA Chief Information Officer (CIO), stated at a ServiceNow Federal Summit on March 4. “My budget over the last five years has shrunk by 17.8 percent occurring annually. The employee satisfaction for use of technology has gone up 20 percent in that same time. So we’re spending dramatically less money and obtaining better outcomes.”

Shive recently shared more with GovLoop about everything from how the agency has been working diligently to streamline the IT environment, reduce duplication, simplify technology, to fostering an environment of technology reuse and collaborative sharing.

Shive’s responses have been lightly edited for brevity and clarity.

GOVLOOP: What are some IT modernization initiatives you’re working on at GSA? Who was involved with those initiatives?

SHIVE: As we realized efficiencies, we shifted resources from running legacy applications and infrastructure to investing in efforts to grow and transform GSA’s business IT systems. For example:

GOVLOOP: Looking back on the process of reaching or progressing towards your IT modernization goals, what would you improve?

SHIVE: It is important to clearly define, communicate, and monitor the scope of modernization efforts over time. This can be accomplished by a modernization roadmap that will help clarify objectives, define a path forward to gain buy-in and support from stakeholders and ensure work is coordinated across all workstreams. A robust change management plan will ensure the new technology is adopted and correctly used by end users to realize the full potential and benefits of the solution. Customer input is also critical throughout the delivery process. This will ensure business requirements are considered and met throughout the transformation.

GOVLOOP: What are you doing to further IT modernization this year?

SHIVE: GSA has been trusted to play a leading role in IT modernization across the government through a variety of governmentwide initiatives, including the President’s Management Agenda (PMA). Through our own IT office, GSA is committed to modernizing its legacy IT systems. We work closely with our business stakeholders and technology subject matter experts to rationalize and prioritize our portfolio of IT spending. From these decisions, we develop roadmaps to prioritize and focus future year planning and IT modernization initiatives.

In support of our modernization objectives, GSA was recently awarded $35 million in reimbursable funding from the Technology Modernization Fund Board to support two strategic IT initiatives that will benefit not only GSA but also other federal agencies.

GSA is also co-leading the Cross-Agency Priority Goal on Technology Business Management (TBM), along with the Department of Education, through the President’s Management Agenda. Our work with TBM through the PMA will provide a framework that will allow our partners across the federal government to understand the true value of their IT investments and how the use of technology can help achieve measurable, positive business outcomes.

By implementing TBM, GSA is on the cutting edge of changing the culture around making data-driven decisions and trade-offs between cost, quality, and value. GSA IT started employing TBM fundamentals in 2013 with a zero-based budget. This allowed a granular view into “what” we were purchasing. Today we are bringing in more of the TBM framework to include data around “why” we purchased the IT. We are increasingly able to show value for the products and services we use to support the business of the federal government, and better account for every taxpayer dollar spent on technology.

This is part one of a two-part interview with Shive. Click here to read part two.

Photo Credit: GSA.gov

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